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Learning Transcendental Meditation to Dive Within

2010/11/29 12:30
Pressemeldung von:
Tom McKinley Ball
"In my first TM session, I felt myself diving into a settled, expansive space where I felt safe and content — and it happened effortlessly. My awareness opened to another world." Tom McKinley Ball
Diving Within: My First Experience

A Personal Story — Learning the Transcendental Meditation technique

By Tom McKinley Ball

When I first heard of Transcendental Meditation, at age 16, I found the words alluring. ‘Transcendental’ sounded deep, beyond the familiar. I’d been studying Zen and trying to practice it — reading every book I could find about meditation of any kind. I soon found myself at a local college campus attending an introductory TM talk, given by a clean-cut young man who looked like Fred Astaire.

The TM teacher seemed to know what he was talking about — not just on the level of thinking or belief, but from experience. I was impressed by his confidence and clarity.

“To transcend,” he said, “means to go beyond thinking, to experience the source of thought deep within — a reservoir of creativity and intelligence.”

It was explained that Maharishi Mahesh Yogi introduced this ancient technique after it had been long lost to society, even in India, and restored its original effectiveness. Not only that, Maharishi systematized the practice so teachers could be trained to teach it in every language and the technique would give consistent, all-positive results for people everywhere.

The teacher presented an article from a recent issue of Scientific American, on the physiology of TM practice. He waved the article proudly and pronounced that science had begun to verify meditation’s practical effects. The research showed that the TM technique produced a distinct, rejuvenating state of “restful alertness” — a proposed fourth state of consciousness unlike waking, dreaming or sleep.
Describing the experience of transcendence, he used a word that thoroughly captivated my sixteen-year-old brain: “unboundedness.”

I surmised that this unboundedness, whatever it was, had something to do with the free and at-ease quality the man emanated.

Next came the big surprise: “TM will be the easiest thing you’ve ever done.” He made much of the technique’s ease and simplicity. The reason it works so well, he said, is because it is effortless.

A Different Kind of Meditation

I had tried practices that required arduous concentration, and others that urged me to just sit and be without judgment, aiming to achieve a state of “non-doing” or awareness of “what is.” There were also the contemplative meditations: exploring lofty ideas, visualizing the sublime. All these practices, even the passive striving for non-doing, gave me something to do or accomplish in meditation — and they all required effort. Now I was being told that effective meditation was utterly simple and completely effortless.

He explained that TM is not concentration, contemplation, watching your thoughts or focusing on your breath. Rather, it’s a technique for transcending mental activity, for going beyond the mind’s boundaries to experience “pure Being.” The process is easy and natural because it’s based entirely on the mind’s natural tendency to seek fields of greater happiness.

If you’re reading a magazine and lose interest in an article, you’ll thumb the pages for something else. If a lecture gets tedious and you overhear a favorite song in the distance, your attention naturally tends toward the music. Our minds are busy not because they’re wandering aimlessly, but because we’re looking for more knowledge, satisfaction and enjoyment. The TM technique utilizes this innate tendency. “We don’t control the mind,” the teacher said. “We satisfy the mind.”

The technique allows the mind’s natural tendency to lead you toward greater happiness within, until you arrive at the state of maximum well-being — your true, inmost Self.

The Dive Within: My First Experience

In my first TM session, I felt myself diving into a settled, expansive space where I felt safe and content — and like the man said, it happened effortlessly. My awareness opened to another world, one that had always been there inside me but had been somehow hidden. It was a new experience, yet intimately familiar.

My breathing slowed almost to a standstill. There were moments of peaceful silence when I wasn’t thinking anything. I felt lit up, awake inside, more fully present and aware than I had ever been. It was like coming back home after being away for a long, long time. I had glimpsed unboundedness.

When I opened my eyes, everything around me appeared fresher, more crisp and clear — as if the world had been washed clean.

And this was just the beginning.

Source:
http://meditationasheville.blogspot.com/2010/11/learning-to-transcend-whats-it-like_27.html

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